@heaths You're right, #git is fantastic and open and decentralised. But those of us who've been around the "embrace, extend, extinguish" rollercoaster a few times tend to get suspicious of hosting platforms and the convenience they bring, which nets users but eventually leads to tie-in. Even more so proprietary discussion platforms which don't work so well as an open record of development the same way that mailing lists do.
@kbm0 I’ve been programming for almost 40 years. Used BBSes then IRC. Every BBS was proprietary. Been using git circa 2008 and GitHub circa 2011. Still waiting for that EEE. And one can always move their repo easily - even from a clone if needs be.
No disagreement about non-email forms of comms, though. I only signed up for Discord for a particular game long ago. And while I hate changelogs being put there, if I *have* to contribute using it, I’ll do what the maintainers prefer.